THESE HAPPY GOLDEN YEARS by Laura Ingalls Wilder: Book Review
When I was 9 or 10 and confined to bed with some common childhood illness, my mother brought me a book from the library to read. It happened to be These Happy Golden Years by Laura Ingalls Wilder, the last in the Little House series
of books.
I was immediately charmed by and lost in this story of a young girl in the American West nearly one hundred years earlier than I was living. Perhaps I was drawn to that little girl because she thought “If I could live this way always, I’d never want anything more”. Maybe I just liked the glimpse into homemaking in the past. Whatever, for a kid who hated history in high school, I was captivated by Laura’s life and quickly sought out the rest of series.
At that time, Michael Landon was still cutting his teeth riding the range on Bonanza, and a long way from bringing Laura to the television prairies. The books alone were what taught me and enchanted me, so I picked this up for the Books That Made Me Love Reading Challenge.
Rereading as an adult, I’m stuck with the images of Melissa Gilbert and the rest of the TV cast in my head. But that didn’t diminish my enjoyment of this book since the show was particularly well cast. How could I not revel in passages like this one:
Before (the blackboard) stood the teacher’s desk, a boughten desk, smoothly varnished. It gleamed honey-colored in the sunlight, and on its flat top lay a large Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary.
As an adult, I can appreciate more that the author was actually speaking of herself; I don’t remember being aware of that as a child. I can also understand that Wilder didn’t write these stories until she was in her seventies. Of course, that would tend to lead to a romanticizing of her circumstances when she young, but even so, I think she had a genuinely happy childhood.
I know, too, that Laura’s father had what he called an “itchy foot” and uprooted the family several times moving westward. In fact, in this book, on the claim in the Dakota territory where Pa & Ma did eventually settle, Pa still says “I would like to go West. A fellow doesn’t have room to breathe here anymore.” He had seen as Almanzo had that “This country is settling up fast. We have driven only forty miles and we must have seen as many as six houses.” He must have been a hard one to put up with, that Charles Ingalls. As an adult, I have a greater appreciation for Laura’s mother.

Yes, I’ve read the controversy about whether the books were actually written by Laura’s daughter Rose Wilder Lane who was in journalism, but they are Laura’s stories, and if she needed help getting them through the publishing process, then fine. But they are still her stories.
And I still love them as much as ever.
For Canadian readers:
These Happy Golden Years
The Little House Collection Box Set



Life was at full throttle with family and other issues for the first three weeks of January, so I did 

So I decided to have a story-time with Steven by phone every day, rain or shine (a new term he learned reading Madeline). His mom puts the headphones on him and he lies on his bed or the floor while we talk – because it isn’t just about reading, is it? It’s about asking questions, learning new things, and finding out what your child is thinking. Our times have ranged from 10-20 minutes and most days he’s fully engaged even though he can’t see the pictures in the books.
Dog In Boots is a lovable brown and white terrier-type pooch who reads a “brilliant book” about a cat with a truly magnificent pair of boots and thinks he would like the same. Happily (or not), the local shop owner has just such a thing – but our dog finds that perhaps they are not such a good idea after all. After a number of attempts at finding the ideal footwear, Dog finds the perfect paws for his activities.
Just what you would expect from Herriot: a lovely, rather meandering tale of a stray dog in the market. The story was perhaps a little too meandering for a three-and-a-half year old, but Grams sure liked it.
Giraffe and Bird act like they can’t stand each other – and that’s what they say. But deep down, they need and want each other. Some of the situations they get each other into are amusing.
Bear has lost his hat and is making his way through the forest asking each of the animals in turn if they have seen it.
Every evening, Old Woman and the animals gather at the pond to serenade the moon. They won’t let Coyote join them because they think he has a terrible singing voice. His feelings hurt, Coyote insults the moon, who hears him and decides to go on a vacation.
I told myself on December 31 that I had signed up for all the reading challenges that I was going to do…”no more,” I told myself. But challenges continued to trickle in in January and weaken my resolve and I saw a few that I could do without adding more than one or two titles to my burgeoning 2012 reading list.
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Entering the
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Kristen at 
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The Challenge: Read any non-fiction book, adult or young adult. That’s it. I can choose anything. Poetry? Yes. Memoirs? Yes. History? Yes. Travel? Yes. You get the idea? Absolutely anything that is classified as non-fiction counts for this challenge.